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Effects Of Climate Change On The Nelson-
Tasman Region
Cawthron Report 1699
Eric Goodwin
Prepared for
www.solarcity.co.nz
Cawthron Institute 98 Halifax Street East, Private Bag 2,
Nelson, New Zealand. Ph. +64 3 548 2319, Fax. + 64 3 546 9464 www.cawthron.org.nz
Reviewed by:
Dr M Packer
Approved for release by:
Jim Sinner
Recommended citation: Goodwin EO 2009. Effects of Climate Change on the Nelson-Tasman Region. Prepared for SolarCity. Cawthron Report No. 1699. 13pp
Cawthron Report No. 1699 1 December 2009
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Climate changes expected over the next century will have significant implications for our
coastal towns and infrastructure, will degrade or destroy natural habitats and valued
ecosystems, and will impact on industries that generate GDP of about $1 billion for the region.
Impacts arise through direct loss of land, habitat and assets; changes in growing conditions and
site suitability; and shifts in species distribution, including crops and desirable species and
pests, diseases and undesirable species.
Unless there are significant reductions in global emissions by 2020, specific effects are likely
to include:
• If sea level rises 1.9 m in accordance with some forecasts, large parts of central
Nelson and The Wood would be inundated, Nelson airport is at risk, and significant
parts of Tahunanui would be underwater. Motueka would be severely affected.
• Significant parts of Farewell Spit, the Boulder Bank, and the Waimea Estuary would
be submerged, impacting important ecosystems and iconic landscapes.
• Ratepayers will bear the costs to protect or relocate Nelson community assets that
are vulnerable to flooding.
• The Maitai River currently overflows its banks during the highest tides and any
increase, even before the full 1.9 m is realised, will exacerbate this phenomenon.
• Current winter temperatures mean the region is largely untroubled by pests such as
mosquitoes, blowflies, termites, jellyfish, and wasps, but with climate change it will
become easier for pests such as these to invade the Nelson-Tasman region.
• Crop diseases such as fungi and viruses may penetrate into the region where
currently they are excluded by lower temperatures. For instance Botrytis, a mould
that causes disease of grape vines, is more prevalent in warm, damp conditions.
• Despite an expected increase in rainfall, intervening drought conditions are also
expected to become worse. Drought represents a stress to many crops, and dried
ground also has reduced capability to absorb water, leading to increased flooding
when rain does arrive, and increased erosion.
• Activities enjoyed by tourists, such as walking, fishing, sailing, seakayaking, and
skiing, are all vulnerable to the effects of climate change, both in terms of lost
opportunity and reduction in the quality of the experience as coastal environments
are degraded and the frequency of storm events increases.
2 Cawthron Report No. 1699 December 2009
1. INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 3
2. EXPECTED CHANGES TO CLIMATE........................................................................... 3
2.1. Local effects of changes to climate ........................................................................................................... 4 2.1.1. Sea level rise of 1.9 m............................................................................................................................... 4 2.1.2. Temperature rise of 2.5 °C........................................................................................................................ 8 2.1.3. Increase in rainfall of 10% ......................................................................................................................... 8 2.1.4. Increase in drought periods....................................................................................................................... 8 2.1.5. Increase in extreme wind events ............................................................................................................... 8
3. EFFECTS ON OUR INDUSTRIES AND ECONOMY..................................................... 8
3.1. Forestry and horticulture ........................................................................................................................... 8 3.2. Fishing and aquaculture ...........................................................................................................................10
3.3. Tourism ....................................................................................................................................................11
REFERENCES.....................................................................................................................12
3.4. Acknowledgments ....................................................................................................................................13
Cawthron Report No. 1699 3 December 2009
1. INTRODUCTION
The changes in climate expected for the Nelson region over the next century include a rise in
temperature, an increase in annual rainfall and increased frequency and severity of extreme
weather events. These changes from the climate patterns to which we have grown
accustomed, and to which the region’s ecological communities and agriculture are adapted,
have implications for species distribution as well as our regional economy, comfort and
standard of living.
Key to our local economy are: horticulture, agriculture, seafood, forestry and tourism (EDA
2009). The region’s climate is of key relevance to each of these, and the expected climatic
changes will have follow-on effects on these economic drivers. This report looks at the
implications of the expected climate changes on the economic drivers of the region, as well as
more everyday consequences.
This report gives an indication of the effects expected in selected key industries. This is not a
comprehensive assessment. Not all of the industries in our region have been considered, and
within those that have been considered, there will be effects that have not been addressed.
While there may be some beneficial effects of climate change, this report primarily highlights
the likely adverse effects.
2. EXPECTED CHANGES TO CLIMATE
Changes in the climate will be dependent on the global response to the challenge of reducing
emissions and can not be predicted accurately, but ongoing research and refinement of best
estimates are converging on agreed ranges for effects. Effects on temperature, rainfall and
wind will vary from region to region: equatorial zones expect different shifts than tropical and
subtropical zones, and local geographic features will cause variations around large-scale
patterns. New Zealand spans tropical and subtropical latitudes and therefore even within the
country a range of effects is expected.
The likely effects outlined in this report are based on a “business as usual” scenario of only
limited action to reduce growth in emissions,
Climatic changes will comprise shifts in average conditions as well as changes in distribution
and extremes (Christensen et al. 2007). Rainfall will be more concentrated into intense
periods, increasing both flooding and drought, while wind will be more concentrated into
significant storms and cyclones (MFE 2008a). Observations show that the global incidence of
frosty nights has decreased, while heat waves have increased in frequency, and hurricanes have
increased in intensity (IPCC 2007). These trends are expected to continue, with the apparent
paradoxical effect that a region may expect more drought conditions as well as more flooding,
as the clustering of weather leads to more variability, and more extreme weather conditions.
4 Cawthron Report No. 1699 December 2009
Scientists predict an increase in global average temperature of between 1.1 °C and 6.4 °C over
the next century (Bernstein et al. 2007), and a consequent increase in the energy of weather
systems and events. That means more localised extreme weather events such as hurricanes,
flooding, and droughts, and some worldwide effects. The temperature increase is expected to
lead to a rise in sea level due to the melting of land-based ice masses, especially those on
Greenland and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Thus even northern hemisphere conditions have
implications for our region, and Victoria University professor Dr Tim Naish says we should
plan for a sea level rise of 1.9 m, more or less, globally. This forecast is based on the predicted
effects of the IPCC’s A1F1 emissions scenario, which assumes “rapid and successful
economic development”, a 2050 population of nine billion with “high GDP, high energy
demand” and that is “fossil fuel and technologies intensive” (Nakicenovic et al. 2000). This is
a worst-case scenario for climate change and sea-level rise.
Making predictions 100 years out from now is more difficult at a local scale than it is at the
global scale, but current estimates for the expected changes in the Nelson regional climate are
a rise in temperature of about 2.5 °C (Christensen et al. 2007) assuming the A1B emissions
scenario (rapid economic growth with energy delivered from a spread of sources (Nakicenovic
et al. 2000)), accompanied by increased rainfall of about 10% (MFE 2008b).
2.1. Local effects of changes to climate
2.1.1. Sea level rise of 1.9 m
The Nelson/Marlborough region has nearly 1000 km of coastline, including about 20,000
hectares of wetland below 3 m altitude (Cromarty & Scott 1996). These wetlands are breeding
and foraging grounds for numerous seabird species and offer important ecological services
linked to the wider ecosystems; their conservation is a recognised priority (Ramsar 1971).
Much of this wetland area will be lost or significantly altered as sea levels rise. While slightly
higher-lying land would have the potential to replace lost wetlands, a “managed retreat” is
unlikely to eventuate as landowners will strive to defend economically productive land by
building dams and stop-banks where feasible. Figure 3 below shows low-lying areas, many of
which are recognisable as important wetlands.
Nelson city already has road signs warning car drivers about surface flooding in the streets, as
spring tides rise through the storm water system and pour out from drain grates
(http://www.stuff.co.nz/nelson-mail/news/1398674). The gently rolling relief of central
Nelson includes sites above the reach of the more extreme predictions for sea-level rise, but
the flooding will become much worse than the flooding that presently occurs.
The Maitai River currently overflows its banks during the highest tides and any increase, even
before the full 1.9 m is realised, will exacerbate this phenomenon. One of the roads into the
suburb of Monaco near the Nelson airport is already cut off during high tides. Specific
changes to the accretion/erosion behaviour of the dunes at Tahunanui beach can not be
predicted, nor can those to the Waimea estuary behind it, or other coastal sites. While a rise in
sea level could be expected to overtop the existing dunes, an accompanying increase in coastal
Cawthron Report No. 1699 5 December 2009
and mountainous erosion may provide the additional sediment that would allow dunes and
accretional beach to build up and remain above the sea level. Low-lying land behind the beach
and dunes may be more at risk.
Figure 1 and Figure 2 illustrate the extent of Nelson and Tahunanui directly vulnerable to the
forecast 1.9 m sea level rise. In these figures, areas shaded red lie within 1 m of the current
high tide level, while yellow areas lie between 1 m and 1.9 m above current high tide. Large
parts of central Nelson and The Wood become inundated, Nelson airport is at risk, and
significant parts of Tahunanui would be underwater. Beyond these areas further land will be
put at risk during king tides and from storm surge.
Residents of higher-lying properties are not out of harm’s way as they might think: three out of
four of the cities supermarkets are flooded; the council building, library, ports, farms, access
roads and arterial routes all become flooded. The cost to protect or relocate these municipal
and community assets will pass on to ratepayers, regardless of their elevation above sea level.
Nelsonians whose houses are spared may yet be affected by way of their places of
employment. Coastal businesses that can not meet the costs of relocation may close, putting
jobs at risk.
6 Cawthron Report No. 1699 December 2009
Figure 1. Looking south into Nelson, red areas are vulnerable to a rise in sea level of 1 m, yellow areas are
vulnerable to 1.9 m.
Cawthron Report No. 1699 7 December 2009
Figure 2. Looking northeast past Monaco and the airport, red areas are vulnerable to a sea level rise of
1 m, and yellow areas are vulnerable to a sea level rise of 1.9 m.
8 Cawthron Report No. 1699 December 2009
2.1.2. Temperature rise of 2.5 °C
It cannot be denied that the prospect of warmer summers and fewer frosty mornings is an
attractive one intuitively, but the negative consequences should be considered. Mosquitoes,
blowflies, ants, termites, jellyfish, wasps, other pests and some diseases are limited in their
distribution by temperature. Our current winter temperature minima mean we are largely
untroubled by many of the pests experienced in warmer areas, but with climate change it will
become easier for pests such as these to invade the Nelson-Tasman region. Termites are
estimated to cost Australian homeowners a total of AUS$910 million per year (Caulfield &
Daly 2006), and the arrival of these species would be devastating to the Nelson housing stock
because of the nature of their construction. Other pest species cause nuisance to locals, or
through their effects on crops lead to economic losses.
2.1.3. Increase in rainfall of 10%
The region could probably tolerate an increase in annual rainfall of 10%. It will do little
however to ease the occasional water shortages we currently experience, as the rainfall is likely
to also become more concentrated into periods of very heavy precipitation (IPCC 2007),
separated by stretches of little rainfall. This pattern can be expected to contribute to worse
flooding, increased erosion, landslips and damage to property, until the region has stabilised to
this new regime.
2.1.4. Increase in drought periods
Despite the expected increase in rainfall, intervening drought conditions are also expected to
become worse. Drought represents a stress to many crops, and dried ground also has reduced
capability to absorb water, leading to increased flooding when rain does arrive, and increased
erosion. Loss of topsoil further reduces the productivity that is already decreased by drought.
2.1.5. Increase in extreme wind events
In July 2008 severe easterly gales caused damage that cost the Nelson City Council nearly
$2 million (Marshall 2009) and the Tasman District Council another $2 million (Kempthorne
2008). As the frequency and intensity of such events increase, councils can expect such costs
to rise, until assets vulnerable to the new wind climate have been either destroyed or
reinforced.
3. EFFECTS ON OUR INDUSTRIES AND ECONOMY
3.1. Forestry and horticulture
Horticulture and forestry are Nelson’s two highest-earning industries. 5600 ha of horticulture
and 108 700 ha of forestry generate regional GDP of $325 million and $306 million
respectively in the 2006 year (Cook 2007). The issues arising from the predicted changes to
the region’s climate are similar for these two sectors. Some productive land may be lost to
Cawthron Report No. 1699 9 December 2009
rising sea levels, particularly around Motueka, Appleby Plains and coastal Marlborough, as
shown in Figure 3. Its protection by stopbanks or dams would incur considerable expense.
Areas not vulnerable to rising sea level will nevertheless be affected by the increase in
temperature, increase and concentration of rainfall and increased wind. Crops that currently
grow here are suited to the current climate, and a change in climate may require farmers to
change the crops they grow. This will imply direct costs and loss of earnings as they become
accustomed to the new crops. Few crops are unaffected by drought, which is likely to reduce
the economic yield from the region.
Drier periods interrupted with heavier rainfall may bring increased erosion to hillsides
following harvesting of forest or crops, leading to reduced soil productivity.
The combination of increased wind, temperature and occurrence of drought periods increases
risk of forest fire, which currently destroys 83 ha in our region per year (Doherty et al. 2008),
an implied loss of GDP of $233 000, plus the expenses of battling the fires.
The warming anticipated represents a southward shift of climate: areas north of our region
already experience the range of conditions anticipated for Nelson’s future. The shift in
climatic patterns may bring with it pest species currently associated with areas further north, or
mean that currently benign species such as the Monterey pine aphid realise their pest potential,
as seen further north (Popay 2009). The distribution of weed species may also change,
bringing new control issues to our area, and crop diseases such as fungi and viruses may
penetrate into the region where currently they are excluded by lower temperatures. For
instance Botrytis, a mould that causes disease of grape vines, is more prevalent in warm, damp
conditions (Wassilieff 2009).
10 Cawthron Report No. 1699 December 2009
Figure 3. This view of the top of the South Island looks east, showing potential loss of land in red.
3.2. Fishing and aquaculture
Seafood is the Nelson region’s third highest export earner (Cook 2007), bringing in
$268 million in the 2006 year. The Nelson port serves the wild-catch fishery, while the
Marlborough Sounds host a nationally significant aquaculture industry, and Tasman and
Golden Bays host further aquaculture farms as well as serving smaller wild-catch fishing. The
terrestrial infrastructure associated with this industry includes wharves, processing plants,
warehouses and hatcheries, and is largely located on low-lying coastal land. A rise in the sea
level would threaten this infrastructure and require its relocation or protection at considerable
expense.
Fishing and aquaculture are well represented in the region both because of geographic
properties (such as the sheltered sounds, shallow bays and proximity to oceanic rises and
seamounts), and because of conditions such as water temperature and quality. While
geographic properties are unlikely to be significantly affected by climate change in the next
Cawthron Report No. 1699 11 December 2009
century, oceanic conditions may well shift, to the detriment of currently important species.
Warmer temperatures could displace some species further south, which could mean we lose
some desirable species as well as gaining undesirable ones. Salmon are sensitive to warm
water temperatures, with death occurring at temperatures as low as 12 °C in the spawning
stage of some species (Danie et al. 1984). Warming of oceanic water may bring new invasive
species and marine pests that could foul aquaculture farms, parasitize wild fish, or render the
harvest toxic to humans.
Additionally, the combined influence of warmer temperature and ocean acidification can
increase organisms’ vulnerability to thermal extremes (Portner 2008), resulting in responses
such as reduced capacity to respond to heat-stress (e.g. echinoderms, ODonnell et al., 2009)
altered shell structure (e.g. molluscs, Melatunan et al. 2009) and increased mortality
(calcareous algae, Martin and Gattuso 2009). These changes have the capacity to reduce the
resilience and recovery of whole ecosystems, potentially to the detriment of fishing and
aquaculture industries.
3.3. Tourism
Tourism earned the region $134 million (GDP) in the 2006 year (Cook 2007), a seasonal
industry that trades on the characteristic sunshine and benign climate that facilitates access to
our national parks and the rivers and coast. Visitors enjoy activities such as walking, fishing,
sailing, seakayaking, and skiing. These are vulnerable to the effects of climate change, both in
terms of lost opportunity and reduction in the quality of the experience. An increase in
average air temperatures is likely to be accompanied by a rise in the snow level, threatening
local snow sport operators. The anticipated increase in windy days will reduce opportunities
for sea kayaking, although the opportunities for kite-surfing may increase. The New Zealand
government put $11 million toward search and rescue operations in 2008 (New Zealand Search
and Rescue Council Annual Report 2008/2009), which would need to increase in order to
prevent a deterioration in weather conditions leading to either a reduction in participation or an
increase in fatalities.
New Zealand trades on its clean, green image, and attracts international anglers to its pristine
unspoiled rivers. Recently arrived invasive species such as the didymo diatom have been
estimated to cost the country $150 million over eight years (Branson 2006). Similar species
may currently be excluded from the region by conditions such as winter temperature minima,
frost occurrence etc, and where these exclusions are relieved by climate change, new pest
species may flourish at further cost to the region.
Sandflies already plague visitors in parts of the country during the day, with mosquitoes taking
the night shift. Fortunately they are not currently associated with the diseases that they bear in
some parts of the world. Diseases such as malaria are limited in distribution by “climatic
factors such as temperature, humidity and rainfalls” (CDC 2004), factors which are expected to
change in the next century to resemble more tropical regions. The arrival of these diseases
may have implications for the number of visitors, who currently perceive New Zealand as safe
and free from tropical diseases.
12 Cawthron Report No. 1699 December 2009
REFERENCES
Bernstein L, Bosch P, Canziani O, Chen Z, Christ R, Davidson O 2007. Climate change 2007: synthesis report. Summary for policymakers. Lima; CONAM, 2006, 71 p.(Serie Indicadores Ambientales, 10).
Branson J 2006. Didymosphenia geminata economic impact assessment. Prepared for New Zealand Institute of Economic Research. 20 p.
Caulfield R, Daly P 2006. An Analysis of termite damage in Sydney and Melbourne. Prepared for Archicentre Limited. 14 p.
CDC 2004. Malaria. Retrieved 24 November 2009, from http://www.cdc.gov/malaria/distribution_epi/distribution.htm
Christensen J, Hewitson B, Busuioc A, Chen A, Gao X, Held I, Jones R, Kolli R, Kwon W-T, Laprise R, Magana Rueda V, Mearns L, Menendez C, Raisanen J, Rinke A, Sarr A, Whetton P 2007. Regional Climate Projections. Prepared for Cambridge University Press.
Cook J 2007. Nelson-Tasman Regional Economic Development Strategy. Prepared for Nelson Regional Economic Development Agency. 109 plus appendices p.
Cromarty P, Scott D 1996. A directory of wetlands in New Zealand. Department of Conservation, Wellington 395.
Danie D, Trial J, JG S 1984. Atlantic Salmon. Prepared for Coastal Ecology Group, US Army Corps of Engineers. Cawthron Report No. FWS/OBS-82/11.22.
Doherty J, Anderson S, Pearce G 2008. An analysis of wildfire records in New Zealand: 1991-2007. Prepared for Scion Research. 61 plus appendices p.
EDA 2009. About Nelson: Economic Overview. Retrieved 18 November 2009, from http://www.eda.co.nz/nelson/
IPCC 2007. IPCC Fourth Assessment Report. Retrieved 18 November 2009, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPCC_Fourth_Assessment_Report
Kempthorne R 2008. Summary Annual Report 30 June 2008. Prepared for Tasman District Council. 18 p.
Marshall K 2009. Annual Report 2008/09. Retrieved 24 November 2009, from http://www.nelsoncitycouncil.co.nz/annual-report-2008-2009/
MFE 2008a. Climate change impacts in New Zealand. Retrieved 18 November 2009, from http://www.mfe.govt.nz/issues/climate/about/impacts.html
MFE 2008b. How might climate change affect my region? Climate change in Nelson and Marlborough. Retrieved, from http://www.mfe.govt.nz/issues/climate/about/climate-change-affect-regions/nelson-marlborough.html
Nakicenovic N, Alcamo J, Davis G, de Vries B, Fenhann J, Gaffin S, Gregory K, Grubler A, Jung TY, Kram T, La Rovere EL, Michaelis L, Mori S, Morita T, Pepper W, Pitcher HM, Price L, Riahi K, Roehrl A, Rogner H-H, Sankovski A, Schlesinger M, Shukla P, Smith SJ, Swart R, van Rooijen S, Victor N, Dadi Z 2000. Special Report on Emissions Scenarios : a special report of Working Group III of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Medium: ED; Size: vp. p.
New Zealand Search and Rescue Council Annual Report. 2008/2009. Prepared for New Zealand Search and Rescue Council. 20 p.
Popay A 2009. Insect pests of crops, pasture and forestry - Forestry insect pests. Te ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 24 November 2009, from http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/insect-pests-of-crops-pasture-and-forestry/9
Ramsar 1971. Convention on Wetlands of International Importance especially as Waterfowl Habitat., Ramsar (Iran).
Wassilieff M 2009. Viticulture - Pests and Diseases, Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 24 November 2009, from http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/viticulture/5
Cawthron Report No. 1699 13 December 2009
3.4. Acknowledgments
Thanks to David Sissons at Christchurch City Council for discussion of coastal erosion
processes, Dr Johanna Branson at NZIER for discussion of the impact of didymo, Bill
Findlater at the Nelson Regional Economic Development Agency for regional economic data,
Dr Bethany Roberts for contribution to aquaculture effects and Ian Tyler at Nelson City
Council for the provision of LiDAR elevation data. GoogleEarth and holders of imagery
copyright are acknowledged by references in figures, used under licensed account
JCPMLGUCZW1T63T.